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Titli (2014 film)

Titli (transl. Butterfly) is a 2014 Indian neo-noir crime drama film written and directed by Kanu Behl, and co-produced by Dibakar Banerjee Productions and Aditya Chopra under the banner of Yash Raj Films.[1] It features actors Shashank Arora as the title character, Shivani Raghuvanshi, Ranvir Shorey, Amit Sial and Lalit Behl in the lead roles.[2]

Titli
Poster of Title at Cannes Film Festival
Directed byKanu Behl
Written bySharat Katariya
Kanu Behl
Produced byAditya Chopra
Dibakar Banerjee
StarringShashank Arora
Shivani Raghuvanshi
Ranvir Shorey
Amit Sial
Lalit Behl
CinematographySiddharth Diwan
Edited byNamrata Rao
Music byKaran Gour
Production
companies
Yash Raj Films
Dibakar Banerjee Productions Pvt. Ltd.
Distributed byYash Raj Films
Release dates
  • 20 May 2014 (2014-05-20) (Cannes)
  • 30 October 2015 (2015-10-30) (India)
Running time
124 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

In Titli, Behl captures the volatility of a society where violence lies uneasily just below the surface. The directorial debut film premiered in the Un Certain Regard section of the 2014 Cannes Film Festival,[3][4] The trailer was released on 29 September 2015.[5][6][7][8] The film was released in India on 30 October 2015.[9]

The international sales partner of the film is Westend Films.[10]

Plot edit

Titli is the youngest member of a violent car-jacking gang in Delhi with his brothers, oldest brother Vikram and middle brother Pradeep a.k.a. Bawla. The film opens with Titli inspecting a parking lot of an under-construction mall in East Delhi. His friend Pintu tells him that his fortunes will change once he buys the parking lot at a price of Rs. 3,00,000. Titli plans to escape from his family and their line of work. While attempting to escape the clutches of his brothers with the moneyafter a car-jacking operation, Titli accidentally crashes a stolen car before a police checkpoint. This results in Pradeep and Titli getting nabbed by police. When they are released the next day, Titli finds out that the police have taken the money from his bag and he admits to his brothers that he was planning to run away and invest the money in a parking lot business.

Vikram forces Titli to marry Neelu to help control him and also to introduce a woman into the gang to be used as a decoy and cover. Neelu, though married to Titli, pines for her lover Prince, a wealthy married man she is having an affair with. One night, after witnessing a bloody jacking operation of her brothers-in-law, Neelu tries to escape from her family and gets caught by Titli. Titli supports Neelu's plans to leave him for Prince if she gives Titli Rs 2,50,000 from her personal bank account. Neelu takes Titli to meet Prince, and shows him that she is in a serious relationship with him, in spite of him being married. Prince is planning to divorce his wife for Neelu. Meanwhile Vikram's estranged wife Sangeeta comes and demands divorce from Vikram. Vikram is forced to sign the document by her lawyer who admits that she has the evidence of Vikram indulging in domestic violence with Sangeeta. Sangeeta also demands an alimony of Rs. 5,00,000 from Vikram. Titli's father initially proposes the idea of wiring the money of Neelu's FD, which Vikram refuses. Neelu asks Titli to deliver a birthday gift for Prince. But at Prince's house, he finds out that he is actually cheating on Neelu, in spite of being happy with his wife. Titli confronts Prince about it, who ends up blackmailing him for his money. Titli and Neelu request Sangeeta for an extension of the alimony deadline, but she refuses. Finally, they are given an opportunity of earning Rs. 20,00,000 by killing a big industrialist by a politically connected cop. Titli drops Neelu to her parents' residence and takes off with all the cash she gave him. Simultaneously, Titli anonymously reports his brothers to the police. After approving the parking lot deal with Pintu, he changes his mind and demands his money back by threatening to shoot Pintu's boss with a gun he stole from Vikram. In the end, Titli returns home and severs ties with his father and leaves with his belongings. Neelu finds out that Prince was never planning to leave his wife for her, and Neelu and Titli get back together.

Cast edit

 
Arora played the character Titli

Production edit

Development edit

Behl, who co-wrote and also assisted director Dibakar Banerjee in Love Sex aur Dhokha (LSD) (2010), started writing Titli as LSD neared completion. In 2011, the news report of a car-jacker gang in Delhi led by a local goon, Joginder Joga, inspired him to start working on the story of a thriller. However, as he developed the script, other themes started joining in, from his personal experiences growing up in the city.[11] Though he denied it being autobiographical, he mentioned in an interview that the idea of intra-family conflict was derived from his own clashes with his father as a rebellious teenager. He eventually co-wrote the script with Sharat Katariya, and it covered themes of patriarchy, family dysfunction, gender-based violence and oppression, and "a desire for freedom". Through the protagonist, the film also explores the circular nature of life – "how we often end up becoming exactly the person we are trying to run away from."[12][13]

In 2012, the script of the film was selected for NFDC Film Bazaar's Screenwriter's Lab and won the Post-Production Award at Film Bazaar's Work-In-Progress Lab in 2013.[14] It also won an award for Best Work-In-Progress Lab Project and was selected for Film Bazaar Recommends, where the 2014 Cannes Film Festival selection committee first saw the film.[11]

Filming edit

For the lead roles, relative newcomers Shashank Arora and Shivani Raghuvanshi were selected. Actors Amit Sial and Ranvir Shorey were chosen to play the role of two elder brothers to Titli's character. Next, he decided to cast his own father Lalit Behl, who is a Delhi-based director and actor, for the role of the patriarch of the family, considering the film itself was based on his early life experiences.[11]

The film was shot across various locations in Delhi.[12] During filming, he allowed the actors to explore the scenes and improvise as no scripts were brought to the set. The production team redesigned a house to give a claustrophobic feel to the family home, where much of the filming was done, to provide a contrast from the expansive real world outside, which the protagonist is trying to escape into. For this purpose, rooms were made smaller, the entrance was made labyrinthine, and even the natural light was reduced in the rooms, so that the tube light haze could add to the effect.[11]

By early May 2014, the movie's post-production was completed, ahead of its Cannes premiere due in the same month.[13]

Reception edit

Box office edit

The film collected 1.75 crore (US$220,000) nett in its first week.[15]

Critical reception edit

The film has a Rotten Tomatoes rating of 93% with an average score of 7.6/10 based on 14 reviews, 13 of which are positive ("fresh").[16] Jay Weisberg wrote that "the film plunges into [a] pitiless milieu with headstrong assurance, presenting a paternalistic world where corruption seeps into people's pores and women need backbones of steel to survive", calling it "a grittily impressive debut".[17] The Hollywood Reporter's Deborah Young praised Namrata Rao's editing and Behl for "directing a largely non-pro cast, situating them carefully in the squalor of their Delhi surroundings." She called the film "an enjoyable, character-driven Indian yarn about an emotional family of criminals [that] gets better as it goes on."[18] Brad Mariano of 4:3 "Recommended" the film, calling it "an impressive debut that is far from what one might expect from the Indian cinema", noting the influence of Pier Paolo Pasolini's neo-realism and the "complex, impossible moral situations" of Asghar Farhadi's films. He ended his review by calling it "a gripping debut film that could mark the arrival of a significant new voice in world cinema."[19] J Hurtado of Screen Anarchy wrote that while "scenes of people scraping the bottom of the barrel are nothing new in Hindi independent cinema, [...] Behl's treatment of the material is both heart-wrenching, and vividly relatable as everyone tries to make out the best way they can without leaving anything on the table." He called it "a film about hope, and it's overwhelming sadness only makes the hope shine brighter", despite its "dark"-ness and its "low opinion of some of those people who populate Delhi's backstreets."[20]

Rohit Vats of Hindustan Times called it "the best Hindi film of the year so far", giving it a perfect score of 5/5. He wrote that the film-makers "don't keep you at an objective distance. They challenge you to stop ignoring the so-called social blots, and once you're sucked in, they make you believe that the injustice behind the rough exterior is systematic."[21] Uday Bhatia of LiveMint called the film "unrelentingly grim, morally unmoored". He wrote that the "emotional and physical violence in Titli is wince-inducing, but even more oppressive is the atmosphere of mistrust and desperation that Behl and his co-writer Sharat Katariya build up."[22] A more mixed review came from Filmfare's Rachit Gupta who called the film "a little too blunt and all too intentionally" despite its "serious" themes.[23]

International Film Festivals attended edit

Awards edit

Wins edit

Nominations edit

See also edit

  • Variety: Film Review: ‘Titli’
  • Screen Daily: Titli
  • The Hollywood Reporter: 'Titli': Cannes Review | Hollywood Reporter
  • 4:3: Titli

References edit

  1. ^ "Yash Raj Films". Yashrajfilms.com. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  2. ^ Ramnath, Nandini. "Difficult fathers, brutal sons, conniving wives: meet Titli and his family". Scroll.in.
  3. ^ "After 'Titli', 'True Love Story' at Cannes film fest". Livemint. 22 April 2014. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  4. ^ "2014 Official Selection". Festival de Cannes 2014 (International Film Festival). Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  5. ^ "'Titli' - Movie Review". No. Post.Jagran.com. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  6. ^ Titli Trailer, Beta News India, 29 September 2015.
  7. ^ "Movie Review of Titli". No. Inextlive.jagran.com. Inext. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  8. ^ "TITLI Movie Review: For those who love their cinema 'real' it cannot get better than TITLI". Glamsham. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  9. ^ "'Titli' - Movie Review". No. Mid-Day.Com. Mid-Day. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  10. ^ Barraclough, Leo (17 April 2014). "CANNES: WestEnd Films Boards Un Certain Regard Entry 'Titli'". Variety. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
  11. ^ a b c d Dipti Nagpaul (4 May 2014). "Ties That Bind". The Indian Express. pp. 1–3. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  12. ^ a b "'Titli' stems from personal experiences: Kanu Behl". The Times of India. 13 May 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  13. ^ a b "Feeling of 'Titli' going to Cannes yet to sink in: Kanu Behl". Business Standard. 13 May 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  14. ^ "YRF's Titli to compete at Cannes Film Festival". India Today. 13 May 2014. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 November 2015. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  16. ^ "Titli (2014)". Rottentomatoes.
  17. ^ Weissberg, Jay (12 September 2014). "Film Review: 'Titli'". Variety.com.
  18. ^ "'Titli': Cannes Review". The Hollywood Reporter.
  19. ^ "Titli". 12 August 2014.
  20. ^ "Third I 2014 Review: TITLI Watches The Ugly Caterpillar Emerge From Its Cocoon". ScreenAnarchy. 19 November 2014.
  21. ^ "Titli review: This is the best Hindi film of the year so far". Hindustan Times. 30 October 2015.
  22. ^ Bhatia, Uday (29 October 2015). "Film review: Titli". Mint.
  23. ^ "Movie Review: Titli". Filmfare.com.
  24. ^ "India's Indie Film 'Titli' Shines at Cannes". The Wall Street Journal. 21 June 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  25. ^ . 25 March 2015. Archived from the original on 25 March 2015.
  26. ^ "11 Indian films at Melbourne International Film Festival". DearCinema. 4 August 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  27. ^ "Indian new-age cinema a hit at Zurich fest". The Indian Express. 31 October 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  28. ^ "Titli". filmfesthamburg.de/. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  29. ^ "Picks from the upcoming 58th London Film Festival 2014". easternkicks. 3 September 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  30. ^ "Kanu Behl's TITLI at 50th Chicago International Film Festival by Chicago International Film Festival in Chicago". Chicago Indian. 15 October 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  31. ^ a b "Titli, Teenkahon winners at SSAFF 2014". Dear Cinema. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  32. ^ a b "Titli, Killa winners at SAIFF 2014". Dear Cinema. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  33. ^ "Titli to screen at International Film Festival of Rotterdam 2015". Saddahaq.com. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  34. ^ "Interesting Indian films at 38th Gothenburg International Film Festival". Sasnet.lu.se/. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  35. ^ a b "Titli takes top prize at Gijón". Wn.com. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  36. ^ "Turkish film festival awards Indian 'Titli'". Wn.com. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  37. ^ "Titli remporte le Prix du public au FFAST 2015". Bollywoodstudio.fr/. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  38. ^ "First-time director from India in the running for Camera d'Or at Cannes". The National. 21 May 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2015.

External links edit

titli, 2014, film, titli, transl, butterfly, 2014, indian, noir, crime, drama, film, written, directed, kanu, behl, produced, dibakar, banerjee, productions, aditya, chopra, under, banner, yash, films, features, actors, shashank, arora, title, character, shiva. Titli transl Butterfly is a 2014 Indian neo noir crime drama film written and directed by Kanu Behl and co produced by Dibakar Banerjee Productions and Aditya Chopra under the banner of Yash Raj Films 1 It features actors Shashank Arora as the title character Shivani Raghuvanshi Ranvir Shorey Amit Sial and Lalit Behl in the lead roles 2 TitliPoster of Title at Cannes Film FestivalDirected byKanu BehlWritten bySharat Katariya Kanu BehlProduced byAditya ChopraDibakar BanerjeeStarringShashank AroraShivani RaghuvanshiRanvir ShoreyAmit SialLalit BehlCinematographySiddharth DiwanEdited byNamrata RaoMusic byKaran GourProductioncompaniesYash Raj Films Dibakar Banerjee Productions Pvt Ltd Distributed byYash Raj FilmsRelease dates20 May 2014 2014 05 20 Cannes 30 October 2015 2015 10 30 India Running time124 minutesCountryIndiaLanguageHindi In Titli Behl captures the volatility of a society where violence lies uneasily just below the surface The directorial debut film premiered in the Un Certain Regard section of the 2014 Cannes Film Festival 3 4 The trailer was released on 29 September 2015 5 6 7 8 The film was released in India on 30 October 2015 9 The international sales partner of the film is Westend Films 10 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Filming 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical reception 4 3 International Film Festivals attended 5 Awards 5 1 Wins 5 2 Nominations 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot editTitli is the youngest member of a violent car jacking gang in Delhi with his brothers oldest brother Vikram and middle brother Pradeep a k a Bawla The film opens with Titli inspecting a parking lot of an under construction mall in East Delhi His friend Pintu tells him that his fortunes will change once he buys the parking lot at a price of Rs 3 00 000 Titli plans to escape from his family and their line of work While attempting to escape the clutches of his brothers with the moneyafter a car jacking operation Titli accidentally crashes a stolen car before a police checkpoint This results in Pradeep and Titli getting nabbed by police When they are released the next day Titli finds out that the police have taken the money from his bag and he admits to his brothers that he was planning to run away and invest the money in a parking lot business Vikram forces Titli to marry Neelu to help control him and also to introduce a woman into the gang to be used as a decoy and cover Neelu though married to Titli pines for her lover Prince a wealthy married man she is having an affair with One night after witnessing a bloody jacking operation of her brothers in law Neelu tries to escape from her family and gets caught by Titli Titli supports Neelu s plans to leave him for Prince if she gives Titli Rs 2 50 000 from her personal bank account Neelu takes Titli to meet Prince and shows him that she is in a serious relationship with him in spite of him being married Prince is planning to divorce his wife for Neelu Meanwhile Vikram s estranged wife Sangeeta comes and demands divorce from Vikram Vikram is forced to sign the document by her lawyer who admits that she has the evidence of Vikram indulging in domestic violence with Sangeeta Sangeeta also demands an alimony of Rs 5 00 000 from Vikram Titli s father initially proposes the idea of wiring the money of Neelu s FD which Vikram refuses Neelu asks Titli to deliver a birthday gift for Prince But at Prince s house he finds out that he is actually cheating on Neelu in spite of being happy with his wife Titli confronts Prince about it who ends up blackmailing him for his money Titli and Neelu request Sangeeta for an extension of the alimony deadline but she refuses Finally they are given an opportunity of earning Rs 20 00 000 by killing a big industrialist by a politically connected cop Titli drops Neelu to her parents residence and takes off with all the cash she gave him Simultaneously Titli anonymously reports his brothers to the police After approving the parking lot deal with Pintu he changes his mind and demands his money back by threatening to shoot Pintu s boss with a gun he stole from Vikram In the end Titli returns home and severs ties with his father and leaves with his belongings Neelu finds out that Prince was never planning to leave his wife for her and Neelu and Titli get back together Cast edit nbsp Arora played the character Titli Shashank Arora as Titli Shivani Raghuvanshi as Neelu Ranvir Shorey as Vikram Amit Sial as Pradeep Lalit Behl as Daddy Prashant Singh as Prince Eknoor Chawla as DaughterProduction editDevelopment edit Behl who co wrote and also assisted director Dibakar Banerjee in Love Sex aur Dhokha LSD 2010 started writing Titli as LSD neared completion In 2011 the news report of a car jacker gang in Delhi led by a local goon Joginder Joga inspired him to start working on the story of a thriller However as he developed the script other themes started joining in from his personal experiences growing up in the city 11 Though he denied it being autobiographical he mentioned in an interview that the idea of intra family conflict was derived from his own clashes with his father as a rebellious teenager He eventually co wrote the script with Sharat Katariya and it covered themes of patriarchy family dysfunction gender based violence and oppression and a desire for freedom Through the protagonist the film also explores the circular nature of life how we often end up becoming exactly the person we are trying to run away from 12 13 In 2012 the script of the film was selected for NFDC Film Bazaar s Screenwriter s Lab and won the Post Production Award at Film Bazaar s Work In Progress Lab in 2013 14 It also won an award for Best Work In Progress Lab Project and was selected for Film Bazaar Recommends where the 2014 Cannes Film Festival selection committee first saw the film 11 Filming edit For the lead roles relative newcomers Shashank Arora and Shivani Raghuvanshi were selected Actors Amit Sial and Ranvir Shorey were chosen to play the role of two elder brothers to Titli s character Next he decided to cast his own father Lalit Behl who is a Delhi based director and actor for the role of the patriarch of the family considering the film itself was based on his early life experiences 11 The film was shot across various locations in Delhi 12 During filming he allowed the actors to explore the scenes and improvise as no scripts were brought to the set The production team redesigned a house to give a claustrophobic feel to the family home where much of the filming was done to provide a contrast from the expansive real world outside which the protagonist is trying to escape into For this purpose rooms were made smaller the entrance was made labyrinthine and even the natural light was reduced in the rooms so that the tube light haze could add to the effect 11 By early May 2014 the movie s post production was completed ahead of its Cannes premiere due in the same month 13 Reception editBox office edit The film collected 1 75 crore US 220 000 nett in its first week 15 Critical reception edit The film has a Rotten Tomatoes rating of 93 with an average score of 7 6 10 based on 14 reviews 13 of which are positive fresh 16 Jay Weisberg wrote that the film plunges into a pitiless milieu with headstrong assurance presenting a paternalistic world where corruption seeps into people s pores and women need backbones of steel to survive calling it a grittily impressive debut 17 The Hollywood Reporter s Deborah Young praised Namrata Rao s editing and Behl for directing a largely non pro cast situating them carefully in the squalor of their Delhi surroundings She called the film an enjoyable character driven Indian yarn about an emotional family of criminals that gets better as it goes on 18 Brad Mariano of 4 3 Recommended the film calling it an impressive debut that is far from what one might expect from the Indian cinema noting the influence of Pier Paolo Pasolini s neo realism and the complex impossible moral situations of Asghar Farhadi s films He ended his review by calling it a gripping debut film that could mark the arrival of a significant new voice in world cinema 19 J Hurtado of Screen Anarchy wrote that while scenes of people scraping the bottom of the barrel are nothing new in Hindi independent cinema Behl s treatment of the material is both heart wrenching and vividly relatable as everyone tries to make out the best way they can without leaving anything on the table He called it a film about hope and it s overwhelming sadness only makes the hope shine brighter despite its dark ness and its low opinion of some of those people who populate Delhi s backstreets 20 Rohit Vats of Hindustan Times called it the best Hindi film of the year so far giving it a perfect score of 5 5 He wrote that the film makers don t keep you at an objective distance They challenge you to stop ignoring the so called social blots and once you re sucked in they make you believe that the injustice behind the rough exterior is systematic 21 Uday Bhatia of LiveMint called the film unrelentingly grim morally unmoored He wrote that the emotional and physical violence in Titli is wince inducing but even more oppressive is the atmosphere of mistrust and desperation that Behl and his co writer Sharat Katariya build up 22 A more mixed review came from Filmfare s Rachit Gupta who called the film a little too blunt and all too intentionally despite its serious themes 23 International Film Festivals attended edit 2014 Cannes Film Festival 24 5th Beijing International Film Festival citation needed 13th Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles 25 Melbourne International Film Festival 26 Rio de Janeiro International International Film Festival of Colombo Zurich Film Festival 27 Filmfest Hamburg 28 Festival international du film independant de Bordeaux FIFIB BFI London Film Festival 29 Chicago International Film Festival 30 Philadelphia Film Festival Seattle South Asian Film Festival 31 Hawaii International Film Festival San Francisco International South Asian Film Festival SFISAFF by 3rd i Films AFI Fest Los Angeles South Asian International Film Festival SAIFF New York 32 Black Movie Festival Geneva International Film Festival Rotterdam Netherlands 33 Gothenburg Film Festival Sweden 34 Festival du film d Asie du Sud Transgressif FFAST Paris Gijon International Film Festival Spain 35 Awards editWins edit Critics Prize at FIFIB Bordeaux when Best Film at Seattle South Asian Film Festival 31 NETPAC Award at Hawaii International Film Festival Best Film at SAIFF New York 32 Best International Film at Malatya International Turkey 36 Best Actress and Best Film Gijon International Film Festival Spain 35 Audience Award at Festival du Film d Asie du Sud Transgressif FFAST Paris 37 Best Foreign First Film Critics Award at French Syndicate of Cinema Critics 2016 Nominations edit Camera d Or 2014 Cannes Film Festival 38 See also editVariety Film Review Titli Screen Daily Titli The Hollywood Reporter Titli Cannes Review Hollywood Reporter 4 3 TitliReferences edit Yash Raj Films Yashrajfilms com Retrieved 25 April 2014 Ramnath Nandini Difficult fathers brutal sons conniving wives meet Titli and his family Scroll in After Titli True Love Story at Cannes film fest Livemint 22 April 2014 Retrieved 25 April 2014 2014 Official Selection Festival de Cannes 2014 International Film Festival Retrieved 13 May 2014 Titli Movie Review No Post Jagran com Retrieved 29 October 2015 Titli Trailer Beta News India 29 September 2015 Movie Review of Titli No Inextlive jagran com Inext Retrieved 29 October 2015 TITLI Movie Review For those who love their cinema real it cannot get better than TITLI Glamsham Retrieved 29 October 2015 Titli Movie Review No Mid Day Com Mid Day Retrieved 29 October 2015 Barraclough Leo 17 April 2014 CANNES WestEnd Films Boards Un Certain Regard Entry Titli Variety Retrieved 12 June 2020 a b c d Dipti Nagpaul 4 May 2014 Ties That Bind The Indian Express pp 1 3 Retrieved 13 May 2014 a b Titli stems from personal experiences Kanu Behl The Times of India 13 May 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2014 a b Feeling of Titli going to Cannes yet to sink in Kanu Behl Business Standard 13 May 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2014 YRF s Titli to compete at Cannes Film Festival India Today 13 May 2014 Retrieved 25 April 2014 Boxoffice Archived from the original on 12 November 2015 Retrieved 9 November 2015 Titli 2014 Rottentomatoes Weissberg Jay 12 September 2014 Film Review Titli Variety com Titli Cannes Review The Hollywood Reporter Titli 12 August 2014 Third I 2014 Review TITLI Watches The Ugly Caterpillar Emerge From Its Cocoon ScreenAnarchy 19 November 2014 Titli review This is the best Hindi film of the year so far Hindustan Times 30 October 2015 Bhatia Uday 29 October 2015 Film review Titli Mint Movie Review Titli Filmfare com India s Indie Film Titli Shines at Cannes The Wall Street Journal 21 June 2014 Retrieved 15 January 2015 The 13th Annual Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles Annou SydneysBuzz 25 March 2015 Archived from the original on 25 March 2015 11 Indian films at Melbourne International Film Festival DearCinema 4 August 2014 Retrieved 15 January 2015 Indian new age cinema a hit at Zurich fest The Indian Express 31 October 2014 Retrieved 15 January 2015 Titli filmfesthamburg de Retrieved 15 January 2015 Picks from the upcoming 58th London Film Festival 2014 easternkicks 3 September 2014 Retrieved 15 January 2015 Kanu Behl s TITLI at 50th Chicago International Film Festival by Chicago International Film Festival in Chicago Chicago Indian 15 October 2014 Retrieved 15 January 2015 a b Titli Teenkahon winners at SSAFF 2014 Dear Cinema Retrieved 15 January 2015 a b Titli Killa winners at SAIFF 2014 Dear Cinema Retrieved 15 January 2015 Titli to screen at International Film Festival of Rotterdam 2015 Saddahaq com Retrieved 4 March 2015 Interesting Indian films at 38th Gothenburg International Film Festival Sasnet lu se Retrieved 4 March 2015 a b Titli takes top prize at Gijon Wn com Retrieved 15 January 2015 Turkish film festival awards Indian Titli Wn com Retrieved 15 January 2015 Titli remporte le Prix du public au FFAST 2015 Bollywoodstudio fr Retrieved 4 March 2015 First time director from India in the running for Camera d Or at Cannes The National 21 May 2014 Retrieved 15 January 2015 External links editTitli at IMDb nbsp Titli at Bollywood Hungama Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Titli 2014 film amp oldid 1192590788, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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